The Best Prayer for Men
By: Br. Patrick Mary Briscoe, O.P.|October
7, 2014|Posted in: Blessed Virgin Mary, Prayer
I read this article here
Devotion to Our Lady may not seem an
intuitive thing for some Catholic men.
Growing up, I’d occasionally catch my father as he finished praying the
Rosary early on Saturday mornings (begun in peace when the rest of us were
asleep), or notice he’d left his handsome set of beads lying out on a coffee
table. I had the blessing of his
example. Other men know their fathers
have placed a Rosary in their locker at work (try and find a Catholic
firefighter who doesn’t have either a Rosary or a saint’s medal) or even just
keep one in their pocket, where from time to time they’ll pause and touch the
beads. But for those men who haven’t
“seen” or “heard,” how do we make sense of the Rosary as a manly devotion?
1.
The Rosary is covert. A fierce point of intimidation of being a man of
faith in our culture is the fear that we will amount to being hypocrites (and
we know how much Jesus loved that…). In
the face of our own weakness, we want to be authentic about who we are, what
we’re capable of, and what we believe.
Rather than broadcasting or projecting a false image of ourselves as
mighty saints, men prefer to keep things on the down low. The problem is this principle of
authenticity—which is truly noble—can be our undoing. When we’re not grounded in something solid,
we’ll drift away. We’re not all called
to some kind of grandiose witness, like martyrdom or preaching, but we do need
to be faithful. The Rosary offers a
structured program for building up the foundation of faith in our souls in
secret, so that when the storms come our hearts will be strong enough to be
true.
2.
The Rosary arms us for spiritual warfare. The fact of the matter is that spiritual life
is war (cf. CCC 2725). St. Paul puts it
this way, “For we are not contending against flesh and blood, but against the
principalities, against the powers, against the world rulers of this present
darkness, against the spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places”
(Eph. 6:12). To contend in the battle, we must put on the armor of Light (Rom.
13:12)! Dominican friars wear the Rosary
on the left side, the side which bore the sword for knights of old. In the battle of the spiritual life, prayer
is the only weapon, and it must be used.
Frequently. Unceasingly. Devotion to the Rosary reclaimed the life of
the 19th-century Italian lawyer Bartolo Longo (who had become entrapped in the
world of the occult and often dreamt of taking his own life), and without a
doubt, devotion to the Rosary will help us overcome the evils which plague us. The temptations and cycles of sin of the 21st
century do not own us, for the Rosary narrates the greatest conquest of all
time: the victory of life and light over sin and death.
3.
The Rosary sanctifies our contemplative side. Like fixing things around
the house, solving crises at work or otherwise designing and building, men love
to muse over problems. I’ve heard it
said before that during time set aside for prayer people should clear their
minds, so that they can be totally focused on God. That seems unnatural to me. It’s been my experience that God wants us to
set before Him the mess and mud of our lives, not hide it from Him. This is the very glory of Christianity—the
Incarnational principle—that God would condescend to our world and sanctify it,
lift it up to Him. The mysteries of the
Rosary lead us to think and reflect on the stuff of our lives, while
simultaneously giving us an opportunity to hand our struggles over to the
Lord. When we reflect on the mysteries
of the Rosary, we join our lives to Christ’s.
By praying the Rosary, God pierces the hardened shell of our hearts and
opens up a place for Him. He will speak
to us, to the problems of our own lives, through the Rosary.
4.
Jesus says so. Ever since
second-grade religion class, Jesus is usually the right answer. Without getting all theological, we can
simply say: men should pray the Rosary because He told us to. From the Cross Jesus tells St. John, “Behold
your Mother!” (Jn. 19:27). That command
to “behold” is not St. John’s alone—it’s ours, too. To behold, to take in, to bask in, to be
attentive to, to delight in: this is the command. Through Mary’s intercession at the Cross and
in the Rosary, Jesus arranges that the treasury of graces associated with His
Immaculate Mother may be opened to us and poured out on us. But we’re left to
seek her, to behold her.
Image: Barthel Bruyn the Elder, Diptych
with portraits of the Pilgrim couple
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